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Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School 1. State ALL requirements/special behaviour/characteristics/features of the following market situations you can think of (don't leave anything out :P, write whatever you know): - Perfect competition - Monopolistic competition - Oligopoly - Duopoly - Monopoly Perfect competition: Requires perfect knowledge, perfect information, perfect mobility of factors. All buyers are price-takers, all sellers are price-takers i.e. there is no market dominance that can be exploited to change price, all must accept the equilibrium price. There are many buyers and many sellers. Firms sell a homogenous product, and therefore cannot charge more than another competitor as consumers will simply shift to a cheaper supplier. Increasing price by a fraction of a cent results in nothing sold, and no competitor would lower price (their output is so insignificant that they would not gain market share from doing so). There is freedom of entry/exit. If supernormal profits are made in the long term, market supply will increase (perfect information alerts entrepreneurs to join the market), and price will fall until normal profits are made. The reverse happens when subnormal profits are made in the long term, as market supply will decrease and price will rise. The demand curve faced by an individual firm is horizontal, i.e. D = P = AR = MR. Perfect competitors operate at P=MC, or marginal cost pricing. Monopolistic competition: Monopolist competition introduces slight product differentiation into the perfectly competitive market. This is the sole difference between the two market structures. Monopolistic competition is a form of imperfect competition, while being the closest to perfect competition. Because there is slight product differentiation (e.g. colour/location/service), the monopolistic competitor is able to make supernormal profits in the short term. This relies on brand loyalty, because if they raise price then not all customers will go elsewhere – the monopolistic competitor faces a downwards sloping demand curve. In the long term, the monopolistic competitor loses it’s edge over competitors as they copy whatever allows another firm to make supernormal profits. Monopolistic competition has weak barriers to entry and many sellers. Oligopoly: Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School An oligopoly is when few very large firms dominate the market. Each sells a strongly differentiated product and has strong price control due to market share. The barriers to entry are very high, often in the form of capital costs as unless a start up was large, the other competitors could easily eliminate it from the market by charging lower prices. Price competition is avoided as it can result in price wars (which are illegal in New Zealand). This is when firms repeatedly undercut each other’s prices until all firms are making losses, if this continues in the long run then only one firm will survive, and gain monopoly power. An oligopoly faces a kinked demand curve, if a competitor tries to increase price – competitors will not change their prices and quantity demanded from the individual firm will fall more than proportionately to the increase in price (elastic demand). If price is lowered, then competitors will lower their prices to match and quantity demanded from the individual firm will increase less than proportionately than the fall in price (inelastic demand). Non-price competition is extremely high, especially advertising. A lot of waste is created from an oligopoly as so much is spent to get a consumer to simply switch brands (e.g. toothpaste ads, new toothpastes come out almost every week, this requires marketing, development, etc. when any toothpaste will do). Duopoly: A duopoly is very similar to an oligopoly, except with only two very large firms. Barriers to entry are very strong, there is strong product differentiation. Often duopolistic competitors will hide behind several brands or names to give the appearance of increased competition. For example, supermarkets in New Zealand and owned by Progressive and Foodstuffs, there are a few independent operators, but this is virtually a duopoly. Monopoly: The ‘no-competition’ market structure. A single firm dominates over the market completely, and there are no close substitutes to the product the firm offers. The monopoly faces the entire market demand curve, and is able to choose the quantity it sells by raising/lowering price. Therefore the firm can operate at MC=MR (the profit maximising point) and gain supernormal profits in the long term without concern of competition – barriers to entry are so great (sheer size of the existing firm, patents, legal costs, capital costs) that no other firm can enter the market. A monopoly will not advertise as there is no need. Monopolies avoid duplication of services (e.g. why would we need 4 different railway providers in Auckland, or seven malls in one area?) and often they can produce more efficiently/cheaply than other market structures, reaping benefits such as economies of scale. Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School 2. Explain what type of profit a perfect competitor may make in the short term and how this changes over time. A perfectly competitor can make subnormal, normal, or supernormal profits in the short term. If a perfectly competitive market is producing supernormal profits (AR>AC) then because there is perfect information and no barriers to entry, entrepreneurs will join the market, and market supply will increase, decreasing the market price. Perfect competitors are price takers, and must now accept a lower price. Supernormal profits are eventually eliminated. If a perfectly competitive market is product subnormal profits, the reverse situation occurs. Market supply decreases as firms who are unable to compete leave the market as there is no barriers to entry. As market supply decreases, the market price increases and firms now gain a higher price for their goods. Subnormal profits are eliminated in the long term. A perfectly competitive market produces normal profit in the long term. 3. Explain why an oligopoly faces a kinked demand curve. (Taken from question one…lazy) An oligopoly faces a kinked demand curve, if a competitor tries to increase price – competitors will not change their prices and quantity demanded from the individual firm will fall more than proportionately to the increase in price (elastic demand). If price is lowered, then competitors will lower their prices to match and quantity demanded from the individual firm will increase less than proportionately than the fall in price (inelastic demand). 4. Explain the profit maximising rule and how it applies to perfect competition and a monopoly. The profit maximising rule is where MC=MR. This is also called the loss minimising rule. If MC>MR, then some units are costing more to produce than the revenue they are generating and output should decrease to maximise profit. If MC<MR, then costs of producing a unit could still rise before no profit is generated from producing the unit, so output should increase to maximise profit. A perfect competitor is a price taker, so P=MR=AR=D. In the long run, AC=AR so normal profits are made at the profit maximisation point. A monopoly is able to choose either the market price or quantity, and generally operates at MC=MR in the long term, so if this results in supernormal profits (AR>AC) then they can maintain these as long as they retain monopoly power. Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School 5. Explain the law of diminishing marginal utility and how it relates to the demand curve. As more of a good/service is consumed, the additions to total utility will decrease. i.e. marginal utility will fall as consumption rises. Rational consumers will only consume up to the point P=MU, as if P>MU the satisfaction gained is less than the price. Therefore, if a consumer is going to demand more of a good or service, the price must fall to match the decreased marginal utility. Therefore the demand curve is the same as MU=P. 6. Explain the law of diminishing returns and how it relates to the production possibility curve and the supply curve. The law of diminishing returns states that in the short term, at least one factor is fixed and therefore as output rises more and more units of a variable factor are required to produce an extra unit. i.e. the variable factors contribute less and less to total product as output rises. In the long term, firms can expand all factors and do not face diminishing returns. A concave-to-the-origin production possibility curve shows that resources are better suited to producing one good than another. As we reach the extreme ends of the curve, the opportunity cost (the amount of production of another good sacrificed) increases at an increasing rate. There are diminishing returns because there is a fixed amount of available resources and technology. Over time, we can discover more resources/improve technology and our productive capacity increases (at which point we can increase production without having to sacrifice production of another good, i.e. no opportunity cost). A firm will only supply a good/service if the price they receive is at least the cost of producing it (e.g. MC=P). In the momentary period, all factors are fixed and quantity supplied cannot increase at all (perfectly inelastic supply). In the short term, costs of producing an extra unit of output are greater (as diminishing returns occur). In the long term, firms do not face diminishing returns (and costs are lower) and their supply is more elastic. 7. Explain the difference between accounting profit and economic profit, give an example to show the difference. Profit in both accounting and economics is measured as revenue less costs. The difference between accounting profit and economic profit is how costs are measured. Accounting costs are explicit costs, ones which can be easily measured, e.g. rent, electricity. Economic costs are accounting costs plus implicit costs/opportunity cost. Economic profit will therefore always be less than accounting profit, as there is always an opportunity cost. Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School For example – a firm uses old technology and therefore is losing sales to competitors with newer technology, the old technology cost the firm very little to buy. An accountant argues that the only cost is the running costs. However an economist argues that it costing them both to run, and in the opportunity cost of using newer technology, being more efficient and having greater sales. 8. Explain the terms 'break-even point' and 'shut-down point' The break-even point is where P=MC=AC, i.e. the lowest point of the AC curve. This represents the point where a firm is making just enough to stay in operation long term, i.e. normal profit. The shut-down point is where P=MC=AVC, i.e. the lowest point of the AVC curve. And represents the point where a firm will stop operation immediately if price falls any lower. If P<AVC then the firm is not covering variable costs and every unit produced is done so at a loss. They are better off shutting down, producing nothing and paying only fixed costs and waiting to see if conditions improve. If P>AVC, then they are covering the costs of producing extra units (variable costs), but not all fixed costs. Operation should continue until fixed costs recur as anything left after paying variable costs contributes towards fixed costs. In the long term, a firm will shut down completely if it falls below break even. 9. What is product differentiation? Give examples. The creation of real or imagined differences from a similar product through the use of advertising, branding, product innovation, etc. For example, imaginary differences can be made through advertising, spending on packaging. How many of you believe that the budget brands (which offer no fancy packaging) are inferior to other brands? People prefer Watties over Oak spaghetti, but they are produced in the same place and are almost identical except for the label. Real differences are created through other methods such as product innovation, service. For example, the first manufacturer to product a plasma television differentiated their product by offering something new and exciting. 10. State how price-competition and non-price competition relate to the following market structures: - Perfect competition - Monopolistic competition - Oligopoly - Monopoly Economics Questions Steven Ma Ching Green Bay High School Perfect competition: There is no price-competition or non-price competition, all firms are price-takers and sell a homogenous product. Monopolistic competition: There is price competition, and some non-price competition (a slightly differentiated product). Oligopoly: Price competition is avoided as it results in price wars, non-price competition is extremely high because it is the easiest way to gain market share. Monopoly: There is no price-competition or non-price competition, there is no competition at all.